Safari 5.1.5 fixes 32-bit usability bug
Just two weeks after releasing Safari 5.1.4, Apple on Monday launched version 5.1.5 which addresses a minor bug faced by users running the web browser in 32-bit mode.
According to the update notes, Safari 5.1.5 Safari 5.1.5 "contains a fix for an issue that could affect website usability when running Safari in 32-bit mode."
Apple released version 5.1.4 of its web browser exactly two weeks ago, which brought a litany of enhancements including faster JavaScript performance and HTML 5 video rendering fixes.
The minor 46.4MB update is available via Apple's dedicated Safari webpage or through Software Update.
[ View article on AppleInsider ]
Comments
If the ability to do this is important you, find an alternative means before updating to that version.
Note of interest: The version of Safari provided with Mountain Lion (5.2) removes the 'Activity' option under the 'Window' tab, therefore preventing you from being able to manually download certain files (such as streaming videos).
If the ability to do this is important you, find an alternative means before updating to that version.
I noticed that, too. I can't find a work around in Safari or find a solution with Firefox or Chrome.
Note of interest: The version of Safari provided with Mountain Lion (5.2) removes the 'Activity' option under the 'Window' tab, therefore preventing you from being able to manually download certain files (such as streaming videos).
If the ability to do this is important you, find an alternative means before updating to that version.
I ran into this recently and found a keyboard shortcut posted on Apple discissions. Of course, I am not at my computer presently and cannot think of it off hand. Perhaps someone else will post. If not, I will try to later.
Regards,
Jeff
I ran into this recently and found a keyboard shortcut posted on Apple discissions. Of course, I am not at my computer presently and cannot think of it off hand. Perhaps someone else will post. If not, I will try to later.
Regards,
Jeff
option command A
is the current keystroke in Lion
option command A
is the current keystroke in Lion
Now it points to Show Page Resources from the Debug Menu.
http://keepvid.com/
If you want to download a YouTube vid, just go to this web site, paste the YouTube video URL and select one of the versions listed:
http://keepvid.com/
Or you can use Click2Flash and save the trouble of switching sites and installing Java. However, there are plenty of other video sites on the web neither of these options work.
Or you can use Click2Flash and save the trouble of switching sites and installing Java. However, there are plenty of other video sites on the web neither of these options work.
Interesting. It appears this relatively minor change has created a conundrum.
I have done a little light investigation myself but, due to the relative newness of the operating system and it's associated changes, wasn't really finding a lot of information.
I wonder why it was removed.
It doesn't list any new cookies while you're browsing, but when you close Safari and open it again, cookies are there.
Will they fix the bug with Safari 5.1.x in Snow Leopard (10.6.8) where it won't block cookies, no matter what how you set the preferences? It's a ridiculous bug. I try each new 5.1 update (on an alternate drive), and every time it's not fixed. I submit a bug report to Apple almost every update.
It doesn't list any new cookies while you're browsing, but when you close Safari and open it again, cookies are there.
? I just looked at my 10.6.8 install of 10.5.4. The only cookies in there are what I would expect. Closed Safari and restarted. Old cookies gone, a few new ones.
Oh well, baby steps I guess.
I wonder why it was removed.
Because it was a Pro feature. Why else?
http://bartkowalski.com/2012/02/goog...owser-history/
http://www.macgasm.net/2012/01/18/an...irected-links/
Safari started doing this a couple of updates ago. Firefox does not seem to have this issue.
? I just looked at my 10.6.8 install of 10.5.4. The only cookies in there are what I would expect. Closed Safari and restarted. Old cookies gone, a few new ones.
The bug is that if you set Safari to block all cookies, it doesn't block them (but it only lists the cookies when Safari is restarted). Most people allow cookies, so they wouldn't notice or it doesn't matter.
There were some DoubleClick cookies in there, so it appears Safari isn't blocking third-party cookies.
This also used to be the case in Snow Leopard 10.6.8 with Safari 5.0.5, but a previous security fix fixed that.